Penguins' Crosby diagnosed with mumps, Angelina Jolie has chicken pox

Filmmaker and actress Angelina Jolie said on Friday she has chicken pox and will not be able to attend events for World War Two drama "Unbroken," her second film as director

Filmmaker and actress Angelina Jolie said on Friday she has chicken pox and will not be able to attend events for World War Two drama "Unbroken," her second film as director (WPA Pool / Getty Images)

Wire reports

Two big-named talents have been sidelined by what are normally thought of as childhood ailments.

Filmmaker and actress Angelina Jolie said on Friday she has chicken pox and will not be able to attend events for World War Two drama "Unbroken," her second film as director.

Meanwhile, Pittsburgh Penguins star center Sidney Crosby was diagnosed with the mumps, the team announced Sunday. He is among a number of professional hockey players diagnosed with the illness recently.

Jolie announced her ailment via a video released by Universal Pictures on Youtube.

"I just want to be clear and honest why I will be missing the 'Unbroken' events in the next few days, which is that I found out last night that I have chicken pox," he said.

The Penguins said that Crosby will be monitored daily but expect him to be through the infectious period by Monday.

Crosby practiced Friday morning despite feeling ill on Thursday. He has not played the last two games as a precaution and is expected to have more tests.

Crosby's face was noticeably swollen -- a symptom of mumps -- while he spoke to reporters Friday. The team said it was not aware at the time that he had the disease. Several players around the league have contracted mumps since late October.

Crosby and several other players apparently received the mumps vaccine before the Olympics earlier this year. However, according to the Centers for Disease Control, the vaccine has a lower effectiveness rate than other vaccinations. The vaccine has an effectiveness rate of 85-88 percent.

It is not clear how long Crosby will be out as recovery from mumps varies. Minnesota defenseman Ryan Suter missed just two games but teammate Keith Ballard was out for eight games.

Meanwhile, the spread of mumps around the NHL has concerned Flyers general manager Ron Hextall so much that some of his players have recently had vaccines.

"We've addressed some things," Hextall said after the Flyers' win over New Jersey on Thursday at the Wells Fargo Center. "We've got it covered as much as we can. Clean buildings and wash your hands and vaccines and everything else you can do. We've done everything we can do to protect our players and our staff."

Two Devils— center Travis Zajac and defenseman Adam Larsson — missed Thursday's game with the mumps. Minnesota has had the most players (five) affected, while Anaheim has had three, and the Rangers have had one.

It does not seem coincidental that the players came down with the mumps after facing a team that had been affected by the virus.

Anaheim hosted the Wild in mid-October, while New Jersey and the Rangers played each other a few days later. Minnesota visited the Rangers not long after that before facing the Devils in mid-November.

Mumps, a one-time common disease in infants and children, is a highly contagious viral infection with an incubation period of 14-18 days from exposure to onset of symptoms, according to MedicineNet.com.

The duration of the disease is approximately 10 days.

Mumps have become rare in the United States since children started getting vaccinated for it in 1967. The disease usually starts with a few days of fever, headache, muscle aches and tiredness, followed by swelling of the salivary glands.

CDC said there were about 186,000 mumps cases reported in the U.S. each year before the vaccination started. That number has been dramatically reduced, and last year there were just 438 cases in the U.S., the CDC said.

Hextall didn't have a breakdown on how many Flyers have had the mumps in the past.

"I don't think you can get it [again] if you've had it. But if you've had the vaccination when you were young, apparently it wears off," he said. "I'm not a doctor. I shouldn't be talking about this, but that's what they've told me."

According to the Immunization Action Coalition, people who have had mumps are usually protected for life against another mumps infection. Second occurrences, it said, rarely occur.

Defenseman Braydon Coburn is among the Flyers who had a vaccine when younger but decided to get another one recently as a precaution.

After Flyers trainer Jim McCrossin addressed the Flyers about the mumps a couple of weeks ago, "I called my mom and asked her if I had gotten my shots," Coburn said. "She told me I had gotten most of them, but I went out and got a booster just in case. And it sounded like a lot of our guys were making sure they were up on their shots or getting a booster."

The mumps outbreak is "absolutely" a concern, Hextall said. "It's been rampant around the league. And it's not a one-day thing. I've talked to other managers that it had gone through their team and their docs have told them that everybody on their team has been exposed to it, but only certain people are susceptible for whatever reason.

"We've talked long and hard about it. Talked to our medical staff numerous times, and we've addressed it as best as we can."

Hextall said the Flyers have "cleaned (arena) rooms and we've got hand wash all over the place _ I was making jokes today about it. So we've done what we can do."

The Philadelphia Inquirer, Sports Xchange and Reuters contributed to this report.